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Dangerous heat bursts have been spiking temperatures across the US as people sleep. So what are they?
Dangerous heat bursts have been spiking temperatures across the US as people sleep. So what are they?

The Independent

time26-05-2025

  • Climate
  • The Independent

Dangerous heat bursts have been spiking temperatures across the US as people sleep. So what are they?

An intense burst of heat hit southwestern Oklahoma on Sunday, sending temperatures spiking into the high 90s. In the city of Chickasha, which is located approximately 40 minutes from Oklahoma City, the weather event occurred in the early morning hours. 'Several hit southwest Oklahoma this morning. An intense burst of extreme heat hit Chickasha, Oklahoma at 5:15 a.m. Sunday morning, bringing the temperature to 95.6 degrees!' meteorologist and atmospheric scientist Matthew Cappucci wrote on the social media platform X. But, what are heat bursts and how do they form? Here's what you should know. What are heat bursts? Heat bursts are localized and sudden increases of temperature that are associated with a thunderstorm. The relatively rare atmospheric nighttime events are often accompanied by 'extreme drying,' according to the American Meteorological Society Glossary of Meteorology. They're also characterized by gusty winds. 'Chickasaw went from 77 degrees and 80 percent relative humidity to 95.6 degrees and just 17 PERCENT humidity!' Cappucci noted. 'Chickasaw also gusted to 59 mph! Medicine Park, Oklahoma warmed to 81.2 degrees and gusted to 69 mph. Altus got to 89 degrees shortly after 2 a.m.' How do they form? Heat bursts need a dissipating thunderstorm or shower and a hot and dry midlevel atmospheric environment to form, according to National Weather Service forecasters. The midlevel atmosphere is around 20,000 feet above the Earth's surface. Thunderstorms develop when moist and unstable air is pushed upward, and rain then falls from the storm. When the storm loses that upward moving current of air, it is dominated by a downward moving current of air. Along with the combination of a hot and dry midlevel atmospheric environment, the downward current's moisture evaporates and cools the midlevel atmospheric layer, increasing its rate of descent toward the ground. The descending air will stop cooling when all the moisture has evaporated, warming the midlevel layer. The heat burst occurs when the warm and dry air descends to the surface. 'As air sinks, it warms up (and dries out). And if you have an air pocket coming from high enough, it warms up a LOT by the time it reaches the surface. It also brings strong dry winds – like a desert hurricane,' Cappucci noted. When and where do they happen? Heat bursts typically occur in the spring and summer, when thunderstorm activity is associated with daytime heating. While thunderstorms dissipate during the evening as they lose their main source of energy, heat bursts occur in the evening or overnight hours. They can occur in many regions, but are most common in the Midwest and Plains states. However, they have previously occurred outside of that range. A significant weather event in 2012 brought one to Georgetown County, South Carolina. They've also struck the Southwest. What are the associated dangers? Climate change is making heat events more frequent and severe. The rapid increase in surface temperatures - sometimes occurring in less than an hour and leading to a triple-digit high - can take residents by surprise. So can the associated winds, have been known to exceed 70 or 80 mph. They can rip the roofs off buildings and damage trees. In Chickasha, they knocked out the power for more than 2,000 residents in Grady and Caddo counties, according KOCO 5.

Fired Oklahoma IRS worker warns agency cuts will leave tax cases unaddressed, lead to lost revenue, increase state tax burden
Fired Oklahoma IRS worker warns agency cuts will leave tax cases unaddressed, lead to lost revenue, increase state tax burden

Yahoo

time25-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Fired Oklahoma IRS worker warns agency cuts will leave tax cases unaddressed, lead to lost revenue, increase state tax burden

OKLAHOMA CITY (KFOR) — A former IRS employee, who moved his family to Oklahoma for a fresh start is now out of a job less than a month after starting, and is raising concerns that cuts to the IRS will leave tax cases unresolved, cost the government valuable revenue, and increase the burden on state taxes to fill in the gaps. The man, News 4 is calling 'John' to protect his identity, had only been working for the IRS in Oklahoma City for about three weeks when he was let go last Friday as part of thousands of federal workers fired in an effort from the federal Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to reduce the federal he says he's not angry about losing his job, he has concerns about how the country can continue to move forward while taking in much less money in tax revenue, due to the elimination of roles like his. Warner Bros. demands removal of Chickasha's iconic leg lamp 'You don't work in federal employment for the pay,' John said. 'You're not going to get rich doing that.'Public service runs in his blood.'My dad was in the Marines during Korea,' he said. 'He was in the Army during Vietnam. He retired out of the Air Force. My mom was in the Air Force. My mom's dad served during Korea.'John followed that family tradition as soon as he turned 18.'Eleven days after high school graduation, I went to basic training,' he served for several years as an Army mechanic before being medically discharged in and his family settled in Washington state, where he built a civilian career.'I worked in retail,' he said. 'I was a salaried manager at a large retailer.'But he never quite felt fulfilled.'I'm a disabled vet,' he said. 'Since I got out of the military in '04, that always just seemed like something was missing.'Last year, he made a big his wife, and their two kids uprooted their lives and moved to bought a farm near got a job with the IRS in Oklahoma City.'It took about a $24,000 pay cut in order to take this job,' he said. 'Finally getting accepted into the IRS or into a government job, it felt like almost like I was going back home. I like serving the federal government. I believe in the Constitution. I believe in the country as a whole.'He started with the IRS on January 27.'I was under the impression I was going to spend another 15 years there,' he said. 'I was expecting to finish out my retirement there.'His job was to make sure businesses actually sent the IRS the tax money they withheld from employees' paychecks, instead of keeping it. He told News 4, for every $1 the federal government spent paying his salary, he could bring in, on average, $20 in payroll tax revenue companies owed the federal government, but hadn't thought things were going well.'I was continually told by my trainer that I was way above where everybody else was because I had tax background prior to that,' he last Friday, less than a month into the job, that all changed.'I went in and was training and the manager comes to our side of the building,' he manager gave him the news: John was one of thousands of federal workers fired on orders from President Trump's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) as part of an effort to cut spending.'[My manager] wasn't given a reason,' John said. 'He wasn't given any information other than here are the names in the list. Terminate these people.'On Monday, John received his official termination letter in the said he was fired due to 'current mission needs.''That blows my mind because the office itself is supposed to have ten revenue officers,' he said. 'With me there, we had four. Clearly, it's not a mission need thing. There are hundreds of cases that aren't getting touched in that one office out of three.'The letter also cited poor job performance as a reason for his termination.'I printed out my performance reviews,' John said. 'It says there is no performance history to display… We all know why I got terminated. It had nothing to do with performance. It's because somebody decided they don't need a collections agency.'This past week, President Trump and DOGE leader Elon Musk have celebrated the firings at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) convention.'We're removing all of the unnecessary, incompetent, and corrupt bureaucrats from the federal workforce,' Trump said at the CPAC convention on Saturday. 'That's what we're doing.'Trump has maintained that the federal workers who were fired were a burden weighing down the government.'We want to make government smaller, more efficient,' Trump said at CPAC. 'We want to keep the best people, and we're not going to keep the worst people.'John said hearing the President of the United States speak about him and his public service in that way — doesn't make him angry.'They could be 100% right,' he said. 'I'm not mad at people that voted for this administration. I understand why they did it. I agree that cuts need to happen.'But it does make him worry.'There's a way to do things with integrity,' he said. 'There's a way to do things honestly. And there are processes in place to make sure that that stuff gets taken care of that way.'He says, with the IRS being gutted, money the federal government is owed and needs will slip through the cracks. 'The loss of revenue is really going to hurt us,' he said. 'My concern is what are we going to replace it with? The government has to be funded. That's going to put a greater burden on the states. In a case like Oklahoma, where it's mainly agricultural, you would have to increase state tax. The people here can't afford that big of a jump in state tax.' He thinks about Oklahoma's members of Congress, and the questions he'd like to ask them. Arrests warrants issued for OK couple after viral video surfaces of child in cold 'I'd like them to have a solid plan as to how to protect the Oklahomans,' he – he thinks about the decision he made just 11 days after graduating high school. His lifelong commitment – to a country he hopes will remain prosperous, despite deciding: it doesn't need him. 'I believe in the Constitution. I believe in the country as a whole,' he said. 'It bothers me a lot that now I think we're going in a direction where we're not trying to do things the right way. Being right and being ethical, I think, is what really drove me and why I took pride in it.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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